It depends, the brand of the sugar, the sand is from where, normally sugar is bigger than sand
Sugar and sand both form crystals, which can vary in size.
In both cases, the size of the "granule" would be a rough measure of each crystal.
However, if you are asking which molecule is bigger -- sugar (sucrose - C12H22O11) or sand (silicon dioxide - SiO2) -- then the sugar molecule is bigger.
that depends on the sugar and the salt. there are dozens of different sorts of sugar and salt and all ae different sizes
in my opinion i think sugar is bigger than sand it
sand
The floor was sprinkled with scratchy granules of sugar.
Each sugar granule has the mass (space) the granule occupies. Collectively, when in a 2kg bag of sugar, the mass is more obvious. Obviously, it would be difficult to measure a single granule (but not impossible).
about 10-12 thousand in the average male adults hand
Grain of sand is bigger
Clay, Silt, Sand, Granule, Pebble, Cobble and Boulder.
Powdered sugar is made up of smaller granules than regular granulated sugar. That means that there is more air in a cup of powdered sugar than there is in a cup of granulated sugar because for each granule to remain separate there has to be space or air around each granule.
It depends on how much granulated sugar you have. Also, sugar granules come in different sizes so you cannot measure the mass of a single granule.
I have sugar sand what grass will grow?
sand
Pour the mixture into enough water that all the sugar will dissolve. Sand does not dissolve in water, so the sand will settle to the bottom of the solution and then you can sift the sand out of the solution. Then you will just have sand and sugar water, which can evaporate, leaving the sugar behind in the container.
Soluble in water, sand is not.
Bulk white sugar weighs 880 kilograms/cubic meter. Bulk table salt weighs 1154 kilograms/cubic meter. So no, salt and sugar don't have the same mass. Further They do not have the same density. 1 kilo of sugar has the same mass as 1 kilo of salt.